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ambiguous sentences

A sentence is said to be ambiguous if it has more than one meaning. Which of the following sentences are ambiguous?

(i) They are looking for teachers of Japanese, Portuguese and Spanish.
(ii) Flying planes are dangerous.
(iii) The old man and woman left the hotel.
(iv) The lady looked at the man with the binoculars.

Choose one answer
1) All of the above
2). (ii), (iii) and (iv)
3). (i), (ii) and (iii)
4)(i), (iii) and (iv)
i think the answer is 2

Re: ambiguous sentences

(ii) Are we talking about planes being dangerous when they are in the air? Are we warning people that it is dangerous to be a pilot?

If it were the latter option you suggest, the sentence would be "Flying planes is dangerous." not "...are dangerous." I don't find this sentence ambiguous.

I am not sure that (iii) really is, either. In spoken BrE, I think there would be a natural impulse to add a second "the" in front of the word "woman" if you did not intend the adjective to apply to both. If you try it with a noun which emphatically could not be "old" the difference is clearer.

The old man and child left the hotel. < sounds odd to my earThe old man and the child left the hotel. < sounds more natural

I would, however, appreciate some other native speaker input on my second point as I'm unsure if it can be grammatically substantiated.